rTMS to Improve Cognition in Parkinson's
Purpose
The purpose of this study is to examine safety, feasibility, and the behavioral and brain effects of a non-invasive treatment, repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS), for Veterans with Parkinson's disease or atypical parkinsonism and mild impairments in their thinking. The hypothesis is that rTMS can improve thinking for people with Parkinson's disease or atypical parkinsonism who are experiencing mild problems with their thinking ability.
Conditions
- Parkinson's Disease
- Mild Cognitive Impairment
Eligibility
- Eligible Ages
- Over 50 Years
- Eligible Sex
- All
- Accepts Healthy Volunteers
- No
Inclusion Criteria
- Veterans who seek services at Hines VA Hospital or Jesse Brown VA Medical Center - Diagnosis of PD or atypical parkinsonism as determined by a neurologist - Meet criteria for having mild cognitive impairment - Receiving stable (i.e., no changes in medication and medication dose) medication and who are expected to remain on stable medication for the duration of the RCT - Speak and read English - 50 years or older
Exclusion Criteria
- Dementia - Failure to demonstrate decision making capacity - History of deep brain stimulation surgery - Severe depression - Resting head tremor - Dyskinesia that will interfere with collecting imaging data - Has congestive heart failure - Implanted cardiac pacemaker or defibrillator - Cochlear implant, nerve stimulator, or intracranial metal clips - Implanted medical pump - Increased intracranial pressure - History of claustrophobia - Metal in eyes/face, shrapnel/bullet remnants in brain - Participants at potential increased risk of seizure including those who have the following: - history (or family history) of seizure or epilepsy - history of stroke, head injury, or unexplained seizures - presence of other neurological disease that may be associated with an altered seizure threshold - such as CVA, cerebral aneurysm, dementia, increased intracranial pressure - Concurrent medication use such as tricyclic antidepressants, neuroleptic medications, any other drug known to lower seizure threshold - Secondary conditions that may significantly alter electrolyte balance or lower seizure threshold - No quantifiable motor threshold such that rTMS dosage cannot be accurately deter-mined
Study Design
- Phase
- Phase 1/Phase 2
- Study Type
- Interventional
- Allocation
- Randomized
- Intervention Model
- Parallel Assignment
- Intervention Model Description
- randomized control trial. Participants will receive either active or sham rTMS
- Primary Purpose
- Treatment
- Masking
- Quadruple (Participant, Care Provider, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)
Arm Groups
| Arm | Description | Assigned Intervention |
|---|---|---|
|
Experimental active rTMS |
For active rTMS, a butterfly coil and MagVenture MagProX100 stimulator (MagVenture, Falun, Denmark) will be used. One rTMS session will consist of 40 trains of 5sec each at 110% of resting motor threshold and 15Hz will be provided at the left DLPFC. |
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|
Sham Comparator sham rTMS |
For sham rTMS, the procedure will be carried out at the left DLPFC but a sham coil will be used. The MagVenture coil has an active side and a placebo side allowing a double-blind study to be conducted. The sham system looks, sounds and feels like active rTMS. |
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Recruiting Locations
Hines, Illinois 60141-3030
More Details
- Status
- Recruiting
- Sponsor
- VA Office of Research and Development
Detailed Description
Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) shows promise as an effective cognitive neurorehabilitation treatment. To date, no rTMS studies have assessed the effect of rTMS on cognitive function in PD-MCI. Nor has there been PD neurophysiological studies using rTMS to examine neural plasticity in cognitive neural networks. This study seeks to fill this gap by conducting a small scaled pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT) designed to assess the safety and therapeutic effects of rTMS on cognitive outcomes as well as on brain connectivity in Veterans with PD-MCI. PD-MCI participants will be randomized to either active rTMS or sham rTMS. Participants will complete a standardized neurocognitive battery assessment at baseline, endpoint and at a one month follow-up. The primary outcome is change in executive function. Secondary outcomes include performance on other cognitive domain tasks and a proximal measure of real-life function that captures relevant functional changes related to cognitive impairment in PD. Multi-modal neuroimaging, in a subsample of participants, will be used to study neural connectivity changes induced by rTMS. Changes in resting state functional connectivity, grey matter volume via voxel-based morphometry and white matter integrity via diffusion tensor imaging will be assessed at baseline and endpoint. To inform how to optimize rTMS treatment in PD-MCI, these changes will be correlated with changes in cognitive performance.